Elizabeth Barrett Browning, a genius of Aurora Leigh, uses several well-designed metaphors and comparisons to create brilliant images that fascinate audiences with poetry novel Aurora Leigh. The first page of work soon set up this highly effective style image, so quickly moved chores from reading this famous work, attracted the reader's attention. Beginning with this metaphor, she compares it with writing this novel to make himself better, just as "you draw your portrait for friends."
In "Aurora Leigh", Elizabeth Barrett Browning presents a refreshing role against Victorian norms. Furthermore, she created Aurora Lee's aunt as a character to show off the real feminist nature of Aurora. The idea of a Victorian lady, Aurora Leigh's aunt, is all that she is not. Browning used a cold image to outline her aunt's appearance: "Her forehead is slightly thin and knitted tight ... brown hair stabbed with gray / cold used in life. Draw on the ground "(1181). Aurora Leigh's aunt looks like a living woman and a person's life. Lee stated, "She lived in the past, I would say this is a harmless life, she calls it a benign life ... this is not life at all" (1181). Aurora regarded her aunt's "good life" as restrictive and suffocating existence. Not only did my aunt often live an organized life, men asserted the traditional sex role (or rule) established by men in the male world. "
Along with the death of his parents, Aurora was sent to live with his father's older sister, Lee's aunt and saw the slavery of family and men through the eyes of the aurora. It was during this period that she lived with her aunt, Aurora encountered a product for women shaped and completed by patriarchal society. The maturity and perception of Aurora soon interpreted her aunt's image as the final product of her own process and stated in her response she hoped she would not participate. It was during the time between her aunt Lee that Aurora was able to form the early British social outlook rooted in her unhappy irrational study.
In 1856, Elizabeth Barret Browning published a novel by poetry, Aurora Lee after some twists and turns. An ambitious poet. In the lighting article, Aurora's cousin and potential pursuer Romney Leigh summarizes his attitude towards female writers of that era: such an obvious sexism as the above poem seems to the modern reader, It is incompatible with the experience of women and women. As the poet continues to dominate over the next 100 years, the second wave of feminism in the 1960s and 1970s brought political and cultural disparities. Women strive for equal treatment and civil rights; at the same time, female poets create a structure of mutual support and profoundly change the poem itself.